The 3-day estimate for Fool’s Gold (Warner Bros) I released Friday night (see below) was dead-on, but I underestimated the Saturday surge for Welcome Home, Roscoe Jenkins (Universal). The Matthew McConaughey/Kate Hudson romatic comedy received a 23% Saturday bump for an estimated day 2 take of $9.4M. Gold will finish the weekend with $22.42M, making it the all-time 3rd-best McConaughey opening and the all-time 2nd-best Hudson opening.

Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds (Disney) appears to be running out of gas. The 3D concert movie was up 57% on Saturday, but that translates to a less-than-expected $4.47M Saturday. Hannah will finish the weekend at #3 with an estimated $10.36M and a new 10-day cume of $53.2M. The Jessica Alba horror pic The Eye (Lionsgate) is holding up surprisingly well, grabbing $2.93M on Saturday. It’s headed for a $6.61M 2nd weekend, good for 4th place. Meanwhile Juno (Fox Searchlight) keeps drawing crowds with a 5th place finish. The Oscar-nominated indie sensation collected another $2.69M on Saturday, and it has a $5.91M 3-day target. By Monday morning, Juno will likely be just shy of $118M domestic.

Both In Bruge (Focus) and The Band’s Visit (Sony Classics) are legitimate arthouse hits. The Colin Farell comedy, on 28 screens, will finish the weekend with about $477,000 for a 3-day PTA of just over $17,000. The Band’s Visit, a winner of 9 Israeli Film Academy Awards debuting on 7 screens, generated a strong $78,000 in 3-days for an $11,000+ weekend PTA.

The 2 big weekend losers are Vince Vaughn and Paris Hilton. Vaughn’s Wild West Comedy Show (Picturehouse) rolled out at 962 locations and will manage only $475,000 or $494 per screen for the weekend.

IThe weekend’s biggest punchline, however, is reserved for Paris Hilton’s The Hottie & the Nottie (Regent Releasing). The final count will show that the critically reviled comedy featuring the seemingly talentless Hilton will sell a meager $25,500 in tickets at 111 locations over the weekend. That’s only $230 per screen for the theatres that were convinced to book this disaster. That means that, based on an $8 average ticket price, 29 paying customers showed up at each location over the 3-day. In a country that seems fascinated with Paris Hilton, only 3,219 unlucky Americans will have been suckered into seeing Hottie by Monday morning.